ManoWhisper
Home
Shows
About
Search
Red Ice TV
- April 16, 2022
Pedophile Groomers & Motherhood in The Age of Insanity - Sarah Dye & Karissa
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 12 minutes
Words per Minute
204.33368
Word Count
14,714
Sentence Count
884
Misogynist Sentences
37
Hate Speech Sentences
43
Summary
Summaries are generated with
gmurro/bart-large-finetuned-filtered-spotify-podcast-summ
.
Transcript
Transcript is generated with
Whisper
(
turbo
).
Misogyny classification is done with
MilaNLProc/bert-base-uncased-ear-misogyny
.
Hate speech classification is done with
facebook/roberta-hate-speech-dynabench-r4-target
.
00:00:00.000
Welcome, I'm Lana. Joining me is Sarah Dye and Carissa, who are the lovely ladies behind
00:00:20.460
the Hearth and Helm podcast and blog that focuses on everything from pregnancy to child
00:00:26.320
rearing, homeschooling, homesteading, diet, culture, spirituality, and politics. That's all
00:00:32.300
the vital and good stuff that we should be discussing, especially now. So welcome to you
00:00:36.420
both. Thank you. Thank you. I think we can only see one at a time too. There we go. There's the
00:00:43.880
other one. Yeah. So last time I had you on Sarah was in 2019 and your family was being harassed by
00:00:50.940
some local antifas at the farmer's market because basically you weren't hating yourself for being
00:00:55.980
white and the city even shut down the farmer's market as a way just to keep you guys out to
00:01:01.080
not be a part of it. And that was your first interview actually that you ever did was with
00:01:05.420
me and we covered this topic and there was a lot of press surrounding this whole thing. So
00:01:09.740
whatever came of the lawsuit by the way that followed? Oh gosh. Well, when I first interviewed
00:01:17.700
with you in July of 20 or in August of 2019, I believe it was, there were so many other things
00:01:24.540
that transpired after that. From that interview, we were able to get an attorney, which was great
00:01:32.140
because the city was like pressuring us to come to this mediation, but there wasn't actually a
00:01:38.060
mediator there. It was a meeting, like a private meeting where they were wanting to pressure us
00:01:43.360
into like moving our booth space and all these other ridiculous things. So we were able to get an
00:01:49.540
attorney. And then, yeah, there was this kind of long, it's a long saga. So I don't really,
00:01:53.660
I don't know how much time you want me to take on it, but it went on for, I guess, what, a year and a half
00:02:00.140
to like two years, two years, I guess, because it was only within the past couple of months that the
00:02:07.320
case has finally been closed. And unfortunately we did lose the case. The judge granted favor to the city
00:02:17.460
for their motion for summary judgment. So while that was very disappointing, there were several
00:02:24.780
other small victories along the way and just regarding the whole situation. So, you know,
00:02:31.780
it's like you, you see the silver linings and, and kind of acknowledge that like, this is a very like
00:02:39.000
long, this is a long process of our folk. And this was one situation, like what happened with our family
00:02:44.780
was one microcosm in this, in this huge struggle. And, and within that microcosm, the lawsuit was
00:02:53.120
one large aspect of the situation, but it wasn't the whole situation. So, you know, count, we got to
00:03:00.900
count the victories where we can. We did lose the lawsuit. I mean, is it surprising? Like I looked into
00:03:05.400
the judge. No, I mean, come on. It's all, it's all rigged at this point. And the city was, you know,
00:03:10.280
full of a lot of these judges are Antifa. A lot of the local governments are Antifa. The Supreme Court
00:03:15.320
is like stacked with Antifas now. So we're really not surprised about that, but it's important that
00:03:20.460
you fought back and you got press surrounding it. And also that you can still be at the farmer's
00:03:25.640
market and you can, right? Absolutely. We are still allowed to vend there. Our application,
00:03:31.980
I turned it in this year, it was approved. And I can go to that market whenever I want. If I want
00:03:37.640
to show up on a Saturday and sell vegetables, then, you know, maybe I'll just do that. So,
00:03:42.840
yeah. Good. Now, Carissa, or I should say Lady Lazarus, I had you on in 2016. This is crazy. 2016
00:03:50.620
for a, it was actually a podcast interview that we did. Also, I think this was your first. We
00:03:55.140
weren't doing video regularly. Do you remember this one? I remember feminists, they were,
00:04:00.240
they were writing about it. The title was a pro-white is pro-woman. Feminism is anti-white. I think
00:04:05.740
it was a classic. Yeah. Any updates? Any updates since then? I mean, I'm sure.
00:04:12.040
Yeah. I mean, I was kind of a baby then, it seems like. I mean, I didn't have children yet.
00:04:17.380
So much has changed. You know, just becoming a mother throughout all that time. You know,
00:04:22.560
we got docs within that time too, which is, you know, not surprising. It happens when you're,
00:04:27.680
when you're in these circles and everything. I know in that interview, we talked a little bit
00:04:31.580
about the folk school that I was a part of. I got unwelcomed from there after the doxing,
00:04:36.940
which is here nor there. But yeah, just, I mean, just I've grown and evolved and, you know,
00:04:43.560
eventually Sarah and I hooked up and, you know, decided to start Hearth and Helm and just have
00:04:48.800
persevered forward. That's good. And of course, you know, since then I've been banned from just about
00:04:53.700
everything, but you know what? The three of us, we're still here. We're talking to each other.
00:04:57.980
We're reaching people and more people are agreeing with us now more than ever, which drives our
00:05:03.520
haters mad. We're exposing more of their goals, even harder. And they're making that easier for
00:05:08.800
us to do. And we're going to get into some of those things. But I did want to ask, since it's
00:05:12.120
springtime, I know you both, well, Sarah's a farmer and I know you're getting into homesteading
00:05:18.140
as well. How's the planting coming? I mean, big springtime traditions also for Easter.
00:05:23.440
In our, at our little homestead, what we have going on right now is we've got arugula coming
00:05:30.900
up, spinach, lettuces, radishes. I just had the first salad of the year today with arugula
00:05:37.060
and it was so delicious. Yeah, really fun. And we're going to be planting potatoes here
00:05:42.720
in the next few weeks. And, you know, all of the crops that we grow each year, that's all
00:05:47.160
going really well. And we've got some chickens. We've downsized a lot. We no longer have sheep
00:05:51.520
and goats at this time. But it's a little bit more manageable because my husband had
00:05:55.460
to pick up some work off the farm just with everything that happened. You know, unfortunately,
00:06:00.500
Schooner Creek Farm was not making us enough money, you know, to get by. So he's had to
00:06:05.400
get a different job. But, you know, those are turning over a new leaf is good, too. So
00:06:09.500
the kids are helping me and it's just mom and the kids mostly out there putting the garden
00:06:14.080
in. So I know Carissa's got fun stuff going on at her place, too.
00:06:18.160
Tell us about it, Carissa. I know I didn't even know that you were doing that kind of
00:06:21.380
stuff. But were you? I don't think when we talked you were. I think you were thinking
00:06:24.420
about it, but you hadn't really gone there yet.
00:06:26.480
Not really. I mean, I've always I my dad was a huge gardener growing up. I grew up in
00:06:31.400
South Florida and we had orange trees and grapefruit trees and lemon and lime and a huge
00:06:35.620
garden and avocado tree. So that that's always I've always dabbled a little bit in gardening,
00:06:39.640
but not to the extent I am now just kind of trying to build on to everything. But I'm just
00:06:44.720
getting my my seed sown and getting ready to plant. We just had snow the other day. So
00:06:49.100
I I'm kind of holding off a little bit. But yeah, I mean, I've got chickens now. And this
00:06:53.760
year I'm trying to focus on getting bees to start being able to harvest some honey. And
00:06:58.540
I just every year I'm trying to add a little bit more onto things. So it's a little bit
00:07:02.240
more manageable for just being realistic with having small children and a husband that works
00:07:07.420
a lot away from the home as well. And just taking it one step at a time.
00:07:11.920
Yeah, that's right. And I want to get some tips on that. I know, Sarah, you've been doing
00:07:15.820
this a while, too, because we're hearing about, you know, coming food shortages. We're seeing
00:07:19.840
costs rise, including the costs of animal feed, which is it's all manufactured, as we've been
00:07:24.720
covering to further this great reset. These globalists are obsessed with creating ultimately
00:07:29.760
a world of total control and dependence on this slave system. But there's a lot of people
00:07:34.940
who see what's coming. They want to do the best that they can to try and get some land
00:07:39.500
or use the land that they do have to start a garden, get chickens, whatever they can
00:07:43.500
to make whatever food that they can just in case. Now, can you both give us some tips
00:07:47.540
for some newbies starting out? Where's the best place to begin with to not take on too
00:07:52.800
much too fast? Because as Carissa said, it is a lot of work and you can't just have tons
00:07:57.040
of, you know, animals right away and just dive into it. So I guess, Carissa, how about
00:08:01.840
we start with you? What do you think? If someone is just starting out, what's some of the
00:08:05.960
things that they can do? Well, I think homesteading can take many forms. I think, you know, having a
00:08:12.900
sourdough starter, for instance, is kind of a form of homesteading, getting familiar with
00:08:16.680
just your local foliage, what you can forage, what edible mushrooms do you have, what edible
00:08:21.780
plants do you have, like, you know, fruits that grow. I think that's, you know, a really
00:08:25.820
great start, just finding out what's edible and what you can harvest in your own area. But I
00:08:31.920
know for me, the big picture, and my husband has to constantly reel me in on this, is that I
00:08:36.020
see, you know, people that have these huge established homesteads. I'm like, I want to be
00:08:40.480
there and I want to do it all right now. And he has to constantly be like, well, no, those people
00:08:44.420
got to that point over a period of time. So I think it's just tackling one thing. Like every year,
00:08:49.660
I try to focus on one thing that I want to add on. And like I said, this year, my kind of focus is
00:08:53.760
bees. Next year, I would like to add maybe some dairy onto our property with maybe goats. A dairy cow
00:08:59.980
would come, I think maybe a little bit later, maybe when my kids are a little bit older and
00:09:03.080
can help a little bit. But I think just having realistic expectations too for your surroundings.
00:09:08.840
I mean, you can do a small little greenhouse if you are in the city on a balcony. I did that when
00:09:15.340
we lived in Chicago, just had a small little cheap little greenhouse that I had gotten. I grew a few
00:09:20.580
little things, you know, doing herbs in the window cells. You can do microgreens, stuff like that.
00:09:25.000
But I think you can start off small and just get creative with what you might have. I know a lot
00:09:31.600
of people are intimidated by sometimes the cost of things, because usually when you start with
00:09:36.400
anything, the cost can be the most intimidating thing. But I mean, like when I wanted chickens,
00:09:40.980
I found a kid's playhouse on Facebook marketplace for like 30 bucks and made it into a chicken,
00:09:46.220
a chicken coop or, you know, using cedar fence posts for garden beds or cinder blocks. There's a lot of
00:09:53.060
options to get started. But I would just focus on one thing for that year and just tackle it one
00:09:57.940
thing at a time. Yeah, that's good advice. How about you? Sorry. Yeah, go on. How about you?
00:10:05.800
We, so it's funny, because we did the opposite thing. Like when my husband and I bought this
00:10:10.280
property, we did the complete opposite. We were like, all right, let's get the garden in. Let's
00:10:14.040
get the chickens. I think we got like 25 or 30 chickens to start. And then the next year,
00:10:18.160
we added goats, and then we added sheep. And you know, we we did a lot all at once. And yes,
00:10:24.660
like you can do it that way. It's a little stressful. And it has felt nice to kind of scale
00:10:28.640
back. I mean, my first recommendation would be to start with just a vegetable garden and chickens,
00:10:35.700
because with chickens, you know, you're obviously you're getting the eggs. You can use those those
00:10:42.080
chickens for meat if you want, as long as you have a rooster, you may get a broody hen each spring who
00:10:48.900
will essentially she starts wanting to sit on her eggs. And of course, those that are fertilized. So
00:10:54.240
that gets you right there, some resiliency and independence from the system in that you you may
00:10:59.680
have a new batch of chicks each year, or maybe more than once a year so that you won't necessarily
00:11:04.960
be reliant on going to tractor supply and like buying chicks. So I think chickens are an excellent way
00:11:10.560
to start and here on our homestead, we have a huge emphasis on how the garden works with the chickens,
00:11:18.600
they they're very much in sync and working with one another like our chickens create our garden beds,
00:11:24.600
they renovate old garden beds, we have a mobile fence that's powered by a small solar charger. So it's,
00:11:32.820
you know, we don't need to plug it into electricity, we can plug it in wherever we want to on our little
00:11:37.860
plot of three and a half acres that we have here. We will take that role of fencing and place it around an
00:11:45.300
area where we want to create a garden. And then we'll let the chickens just live in that area, you know,
00:11:50.020
they have shelter, they have a place to lay eggs, they eat the weeds in the grass, we are of course,
00:11:54.900
supplementing their feed with some nice non GMO feed as long as we can buy that from the store, right. And so we're
00:12:01.860
we're getting the eggs each day, but then they're depositing manure in the garden area. And then we
00:12:07.060
add straw and like in the autumn, we'll put fall leaves on that area. So we're kind of layering
00:12:12.420
these things with the manure. And then you can then move the chickens off of that area to a new area.
00:12:18.980
And then you have an instant beautiful garden, that's going to be rich in fertility and with the
00:12:24.420
mulch that you've added. Like, I don't mean mulch, I always have to add this disclaimer,
00:12:29.620
I'm not talking about the kind of expensive landscape mulch you buy at a landscaping store,
00:12:33.860
I'm talking about old hay or straw if you can get it for inexpensive fall leaves, this sort of thing.
00:12:40.820
So that's like, that's, that's my probably top recommendation is to get started with chickens
00:12:45.940
and a vegetable garden and learning how to merge those two things so that you can kind of get some
00:12:52.260
systems down. In my opinion, it's just an excellent, it's an excellent system because it's very low
00:12:58.260
maintenance. And the, the, the mulch and stuff that you're putting down over that chicken area,
00:13:03.860
it keeps the weeds down. So you see so many people, they want to, they want to till up this huge patch
00:13:08.500
and they get all excited and they want to have this big vegetable garden. But then as soon as like
00:13:12.980
July comes or August, it's just, the weeds have completely taken over and it's pretty overwhelming for
00:13:19.300
almost anyone to deal with. So that's, that is how we do it. Now, if you're in an area that's just
00:13:24.980
like terrible rocky clay, I don't have a whole lot of experience with that. So, you know, you can still
00:13:32.100
use this method, but you might have to kind of alter it just a little bit. Like maybe you do
00:13:36.740
a combination of tilling, chickens and mulching, you know, maybe you incorporate those three things,
00:13:42.020
but yeah, it's great. It's a nice symbiotic relationship. Exactly. That's what I would think
00:13:46.180
to garden and chickens. Yeah. I have some friends that bought a cow and people don't realize how
00:13:51.540
much a cat, one cow can eat. It's like 30 pounds a day or something. And you have to milk them what,
00:13:57.060
two times a day. And it's a lot of, it's a lot of milk, right? Like three to four gallons per milking,
00:14:03.140
or is it three to four gallons a day? Yeah. They get per day. So one cow could easily take care of like
00:14:08.340
10, 15 families. So I have a couple of friends here that are doing like a herd share for just their
00:14:14.100
friends and family because one cow can provide so much. You don't think about that. Like let's
00:14:18.580
get a cow. But then you're out there milking all the time. The feed is expensive. Like there's things
00:14:24.100
that you learn as you go that you wouldn't know. I think people maybe have a romantic idea about some
00:14:29.460
of those things and then they realize how much work and also money and maintenance that it takes
00:14:33.860
as well. Now, are you both concerned about how far elites might take a lot of these
00:14:38.900
food shortages? I know you both listen to Ice Age Farmer as well. You know, and if you listen to
00:14:44.020
him a lot, you think, oh my God, it's going to happen next week. I got to get food. I got to start,
00:14:47.540
you know, but, or do you think that they're just going to keep up the bread and the circuses for a
00:14:52.180
while? Because it is a risk for them to take away a man's food supply and what may unfold from there.
00:14:58.500
I am certainly concerned about it. I think that either way it goes, it's going to be terrible,
00:15:05.780
because if you want to refer to it as, like you said, keeping up the bread and circuses or
00:15:10.340
a slow bleed, essentially, that's going to be just as bad, I think, as pulling a plug on everything
00:15:18.020
at once, if you think about it. Because we've already had so much with this COVID crap and
00:15:24.100
traumatizing people and, you know, stripping a lot of good, hardworking people of their ability to
00:15:29.620
provide for their families, telling them that they cannot live and cannot, you know, be free
00:15:34.100
and these things. So I think that people are already kind of mentally on the verge of, you know,
00:15:39.780
just feeling to where they're getting to a point where they've had enough. And then combined with
00:15:44.500
the inflation, the gas prices going up, you know, supply chain issues, it's hard to say. I don't see
00:15:52.340
it slowing down so far. I suppose I can't predict the future, but I can certainly just observe. And what
00:15:58.340
I'm observing is that it's, it's moving pretty quickly. And I haven't seen any signs of it
00:16:04.340
improving at all. So the trajectory is certainly, you know, not looking very good.
00:16:10.820
Carissa, what do you think?
00:16:11.620
That's kind of my opinion.
00:16:12.340
Yep. Oh, I know.
00:16:13.540
Yeah. Yeah, it's certainly, certainly scary to see what's going on. I think, I think they just kind
00:16:18.580
of keep slowly testing to see, or test the waters just to see how much they can get away with and
00:16:23.460
for how long they can get away with it. And how many people are going to, you know,
00:16:27.860
fold with this and go along with it, who are going to fight back. And it's been a little
00:16:31.860
disappointing to be honest, to see collectively as a whole, not, not as many, not as much pushback
00:16:39.460
as I would hope to see. But, you know, something else that I, that I kind of get concerned about
00:16:44.900
with this too, is, is if it's just another, through the shortages, just another way to,
00:16:50.660
you know, tinker with our food more, put more poisons and toxins into them to find these new
00:16:55.860
innovative ways to, you know, combat the shortages, to come up with like, kind of like
00:17:01.220
they did with genetically modified foods to combat this mass production to end world hunger and
00:17:07.860
everything. If it's just, they're going to come up with these new, new ways to do that stuff,
00:17:11.460
just to, to make our stuff even more toxic and making people sicker and, and everything.
00:17:16.980
So it's, it is, it is really troubling, but I, I've been over time just kind of stocking up on
00:17:22.100
a lot of staples, just, uh, for my own security, you're never, you're never going to not need it.
00:17:26.740
I mean, you can just filter through it as you need it. And it doesn't hurt to have a security,
00:17:31.780
an insurance policy or security blanket.
00:17:34.180
Never does. Now, according to Facebook though, if you're, uh, prepping, if you're prepared,
00:17:38.260
you're an extremist. They put a warning out for that. Do you have a friend who's canning too much?
00:17:42.580
You might want to report them to the thought police immediately. Well, all, all of these
00:17:48.180
things are making motherhood today more challenging than ever. I feel, I think, because although we
00:17:52.580
have the comforts and some of those are, are going to be taken away, we have to constantly
00:17:55.860
deal with propaganda that's seeking to destroy our kids via all this gender madness. We have
00:18:00.820
critical race theory lies. We have mass immigration. Now we have this, all this fat acceptance on top of
00:18:07.060
the feminism and just basically all these forms of globo homo liberalism. And it's constantly coming
00:18:12.020
at us and our children from literally every angle. It's like you can't isolate from it in the modern
00:18:17.300
world. So how do you both deal with this as mothers, uh, you know, raising kids in this trashy,
00:18:23.300
freakish kind of fat neoliberal anti-white culture that's constantly seeking to turn our kids into these
00:18:29.860
mutant freaks. So any tips on that? Larissa, we'll start with you. Big one, I know.
00:18:34.580
Well, yeah, that is a loaded question in the sense that there's so many areas you can touch
00:18:41.140
upon it, but I mean, homeschooling is definitely not negotiable at this point. I mean, even private
00:18:46.180
schools are not safe. Um, you know, I think people should be doing whatever they can in their power to
00:18:52.180
homeschool to, I mean, that's probably the biggest, the biggest factor right there, but just being
00:18:57.380
mindful of what their kids are consuming, uh, what they're watching, what they're playing, who they are
00:19:02.500
associating with. Cause they, they are very, they do adapt to, you know, their surroundings and who
00:19:08.180
they're with and everything. And I, I think too, you know, we were talking about this a little bit
00:19:12.260
before, um, you know, we started that. I think, you know, my daughter is four now and she's getting
00:19:18.660
more curious and asking more questions and getting more intuitive and aware of her surroundings. And so
00:19:23.860
it doesn't hurt to have these open and honest conversations with our children. Of course,
00:19:27.220
there's an age appropriate time for certain conversations, but at some point somebody is
00:19:31.220
going to talk to them about it and it might as well be you to introduce it. And you can, you know,
00:19:35.700
just as they get older and more mature and have more of an understanding of things, have those,
00:19:40.500
those conversations. What do you think, Sarah? Any tips?
00:19:46.580
Yeah, I, I completely agree. You know, once upon a time years ago, I used to kind of say,
00:19:52.820
Oh, you know, your, your children pick up on anti-white stuff naturally and, and this sort
00:19:57.620
of thing, but over the years, no, I've, I've changed my mind on that. Um, while they, they do
00:20:01.940
pick up on some of it naturally, um, a lot of it does need explaining. And so like Carissa said,
00:20:08.260
being able to have, you know, honest conversations and being prepared to answer some questions about
00:20:12.740
things and also inoculating your children with positive, um, information and, and stories,
00:20:19.780
you know, from our folk, because I mean, we have like a huge well that we can draw upon. Obviously,
00:20:25.060
I mean, our people are full of, uh, heroes and, you know, epic, epic stories and, um, you know,
00:20:32.420
just civilization, essentially like everything great, you know, so just home homeschooling them
00:20:38.740
and showing them all of that, um, helps. I really feel like it helps kind of prepare them to, um, to be
00:20:46.020
able to identify and recognize, you know, the anti-whiteism that's, you know, just becoming
00:20:51.860
just so in your face and so prevalent. Um, we also have to not be afraid to protect them and shelter
00:20:59.220
them. And, um, I know that like some, some people say, oh, exposing your children is, is better because,
00:21:06.020
um, you know, somehow that's going to like make them more prepared. And I just completely disagree
00:21:10.740
with that. I think that we have to shelter them from this degeneracy as much as possible.
00:21:16.900
Why would we want to allow that, you know, into their beautiful, pure, sweet little souls and minds,
00:21:23.620
like, um, not allowing your children to have free, you know, use of YouTube, for instance,
00:21:28.820
is just something so simple and seems like why, you know, like, I, I don't know any, but very many
00:21:33.220
people that do, but a lot of parents are still doing that. You know, they're letting their kids
00:21:38.100
just be on YouTube and be on the internet and watch whatever they want. And they're getting,
00:21:42.020
um, shown horrible things, you know, pornography and just all sorts of other, like terrible
00:21:49.060
brainwashing, like, you know, traumatic imagery, even in like music videos and stuff like that,
00:21:54.500
that are, that are common nowadays. And, um, and even modern films and movies, like even Disney,
00:22:00.100
obviously like is total crap. And, um, and so many other sources, like, I know we've all,
00:22:06.340
we've all said this many times, but Netflix and a lot of stuff coming out from Disney and,
00:22:10.580
um, even like Amazon, the Amazon stuff, it's almost all just such garbage. And if it's not
00:22:15.460
like intentionally subversive and degenerate, it's just like horribly, uh, bleak and boring.
00:22:21.780
Like the graphic art is so like basic and not creative. And it's almost like, it's just designed
00:22:26.340
to like, um, hold their attention, but not without any, you know, substance, you know what I mean?
00:22:31.940
Like you see that even, even with the children's museum, like I was telling you about our experience
00:22:36.820
at the children's museum.
00:22:37.700
Yeah. You told me, I was like, let me guess, lots of diversity posters. First thing, you know,
00:22:41.780
lots of that multiculturalism, blah, blah, blah, bad whitey, bad colonialism. Like, and it's,
00:22:47.940
that's what it is. That's what it is everywhere. Yeah. But it's different because we're as mothers,
00:22:52.980
we're equipped. So we know these things so we can arm our children with the truth. And you're right.
00:22:57.220
It, there's a, a period when it's too young to expose your kid to certain things. So like if they,
00:23:02.500
people think, oh, you got to inoculate them, expose them to it before someone else does first.
00:23:05.780
Well, it's about the child psyche and development and where they're at. A five-year-old shouldn't
00:23:10.420
be seeing this like pedophile drag queen story hour stuff, which we'll get into later because it's
00:23:15.380
way beyond drag queen story hour now. But I think that you have to call it out when you see it and you
00:23:19.860
have to nip it in the bud right there so that your kids know the score you, you have to explain.
00:23:24.740
And we have the answers for them. We have the full, full, all-encompassing explanation of why
00:23:30.740
some of these things are happening, what it really is. And some women don't have that, right?
00:23:35.780
At the same time, we can't be like a religious nut. You know, we have to be balanced about it
00:23:40.180
and talk about these things in a cool way. You can call out all this liberal
00:23:44.260
bullshit in a way that kids do find funny because they do because there's so much to laugh at about
00:23:49.620
it. You know, it's like it's the cult of crazy. And if you get kids to see it, I think it makes
00:23:55.460
life so much easier for them and more fun in a good way that they're not going to get all the
00:24:01.460
usual peer pressure crap and stuff. I see this. I see how it empowers them because I see all these
00:24:06.260
kids who are homeschooled and just how on the level they are about stuff, how cool they are.
00:24:11.300
They're really centered and balanced, like some of the healthiest kids you'll ever meet.
00:24:15.220
And that's one of the approaches that I've seen, you know, parents take. I don't know if you want
00:24:20.660
to add anything to that. I did. I did actually want to add that. I think it's really great that
00:24:24.500
you brought in the element of keeping the humor with it, because if we don't do that for our
00:24:29.620
children, then it's far too black pilling for them to handle, you know? So I love that. I love
00:24:35.620
that you mentioned that because it is, it is like really funny. Sometimes you just have to laugh
00:24:39.940
because it is so insane. It's a powerful tool, you know, and the other side knows that.
00:24:43.700
So like if you see, you know, the crazy purple haired, tranny feminist or whatever,
00:24:48.500
just conditioning of like laughing at that, like that is not normal. That is not something I'm
00:24:53.620
ever going to take seriously. You know what I mean? It's just like, just laugh it off.
00:24:58.820
And then I think it just unconsciously, it goes in, well, very consciously, but like it sticks with
00:25:03.940
them. I remember the good times I had with mom laughing at that, you know, guy at the supermarket
00:25:08.820
wearing high heels who thought he was a girl or something, you know? And it's amazing.
00:25:11.620
Some of the things that kids already see there because they're so close to their natural,
00:25:16.500
raw, healthy state that they call out a lot of these weird things when they see it. That's
00:25:20.420
what I've noticed anyway. The kids, things just fly out of kids' mouths and it's like,
00:25:24.340
yeah, you're, you're right. You know, that's weird or it shouldn't be that way.
00:25:29.540
Carissa. It's so true. Yeah, I know. Carissa, anything you wanted to add to that?
00:25:34.340
No, I do think humor is a great thing to implement as well. My husband's really good at doing that.
00:25:40.100
Um, I, I do think too, just, it is a good, a good tool when, of course, when they're a little bit
00:25:46.580
older to show them to, you know, what we fight for, why we do this so that they can kind of see what the
00:25:51.620
alternative is too. I mean, more so the humor definitely is a better approach, but also that,
00:25:56.820
just that realism of, you know, looking at this, this kind of abyss of degeneracy is kind of the alternative.
00:26:03.060
So, um, if we don't fight and we don't carry on a legacy and speak out against this.
00:26:09.780
That's right. Well, I want to talk about being a dissident mother. Now, I know I told you both
00:26:14.260
earlier that, you know, I, I think dissidents today, our views are normal and healthy, but
00:26:20.340
according to this like psychotic system right now, we're like the scary dissident moms, you know, we,
00:26:25.380
women like us get attacked for literally everything we do and how we do it. It's all white supremacist and
00:26:31.060
racist. You want chickens. You want happy kids. You're a racist. You want to live somewhere clean
00:26:36.020
and safe and be alone. You're a racist. There isn't anything that hasn't been attacked. Even
00:26:41.220
the way that we housewife, I always like to bring up the goodie from New York Slimes piece a long
00:26:45.540
time ago called the, the housewives of white supremacy. It was a hilarious article. And the
00:26:50.340
beginning starts out talking about this show and was attacking my guests who considered herself a
00:26:55.940
traditional wife. She had Norwegian roots, right? Lives in the Dakotas. And she said that she wanted
00:27:00.500
kids that looked like her. And they were talking about this is just the disgusting white supremacy.
00:27:05.380
And they complained about, you know, some of our other friends that we know, mutual friends who are
00:27:09.700
YouTubers who were at the time who were, you know, pretty and soft spoken. And they talked about having
00:27:15.540
lots of children and like the horror of this. Right. And since then, all of these women have been banned
00:27:21.460
because, well, let's face it, because they're white, they don't talk about this with anyone else.
00:27:25.860
But let's get into this truth about trad wives, okay? Because I did a video on this as well. And
00:27:31.780
I always say traditional according to what, you know, what era, what social class is a woman in?
00:27:36.980
Does she live in the city? Is she in the country? There's different ways to be a traditional woman,
00:27:41.700
which I don't obsess about. Like some people used to have a rule book for these things, you know,
00:27:46.500
at the end of the day, I think you have to do what's best for your family, however that may look.
00:27:50.580
So I wanted to get your opinion on a tradition being a traditional woman. Sarah, let's start with you.
00:27:56.500
Yeah, it's there's so much to say there. I mean, it's, well, first and foremost, obviously,
00:28:02.100
our enemies attack the the housewives, the trad wives and whatnot, so hard, because they know how
00:28:11.460
powerful it can be when women are speaking out about things, because it attracts other women. And,
00:28:17.780
you know, when women get in groups, like they can, they can accomplish great things, right?
00:28:22.260
And so that's obviously why they they attack us so bad. And I know you've you've been on the,
00:28:28.900
you've received the the most of that over the years, it's just unbelievable what they've done to
00:28:34.180
you and other other moms. But yeah, I agree. I mean, I feel like our people and this movement,
00:28:41.460
and I mean, I know, like, I kind of hate to say this movement, because it's, it's such a diverse
00:28:47.060
thing. And there's a lot of different like factions. But essentially, when I say that I'm
00:28:50.340
talking about just our folk who are waking up to our identity, you know, as Europeans as white people,
00:28:57.380
and shedding, you know, the white guilt, essentially, that we've all been like,
00:29:01.540
plagued with our entire lives. So that's what I mean, when I say this movement, this movement of
00:29:06.180
people awakening, is, is a very mixed group of people, like we have a lot of different types of
00:29:13.780
people in this, I have met so many people over the years. And a lot of us, you know, we have just like
00:29:21.380
different personalities, different talents, different lifestyles, like you were saying,
00:29:25.460
some people are living in urban areas, some people are super into homesteading,
00:29:29.060
you know, other people are really into computer programming, like we need all kinds, we need
00:29:33.140
lawyers, we need people who know how to build websites, we need people who are creating payment
00:29:37.540
platforms and social media platforms and creating something else, you know, for us. And so, along with
00:29:43.860
that is, you know, again, I'm kind of repeating myself, but it just comes like, well, I guess we have
00:29:48.020
true diversity in our movement, as far as our folk, as far as our folk go. And you know, some of,
00:29:52.580
some of my Tradway friends are like super into the nostalgia of the 1950s. And I can totally
00:29:59.220
appreciate like a lot of that, you know, I like some of the dress styles, like I think it's super
00:30:04.420
sweet, like, that that's kind of where they're finding their identity. You know, other women are
00:30:09.700
maybe a little bit louder and outspoken and are producing videos or content, other women are quietly
00:30:15.540
writing blogs, other women are not doing anything online at all. And they're just in their local
00:30:19.620
communities, and just being at home raising their children. And then some of us are kind of doing a
00:30:24.740
little bit of all of that. And so I think, you know, there's certainly no like cookie cutter,
00:30:30.660
one size fits all for like, quote, unquote, trad wife. But what we really support is just,
00:30:37.220
well, what we promote is supporting each other, you know, as women who are awakening,
00:30:42.580
and in the process of awakening out of this, you know, crap.
00:30:46.900
Danielle Pletka- Very well said. And we need our sisterhood,
00:30:49.620
you know, I'm surrounded by tons of women right now. And it's awesome that you can have that to
00:30:53.060
talk to you. And I feel like a lot of white women in particular haven't had that for a long time.
00:30:57.620
So it feels really powerful when you can be around women that feel like your sisters that you
00:31:01.700
understand you can talk about anything like it's so important to have that, you know, absolutely.
00:31:06.660
It is. Carissa, what are your thoughts?
00:31:08.180
It really is.
00:31:09.780
Yeah, I think, you know, nationalism and the nuclear family start at home. And that's what
00:31:13.620
the women, the women are the foundations of the home. And, you know, it does like kind of like
00:31:18.420
what Sarah said, it doesn't matter to me what, what, you know, period in history you, you kind
00:31:23.300
of relate to if it's, you know, the Valkyrie area, if it's the 1950s, it's whatever, it doesn't
00:31:28.020
matter. I don't care if you channel, you know, Lily Munster or June Cleaver, it's whatever,
00:31:32.820
whatever works for you. I mean, we do need to be all over the place and in different
00:31:36.260
areas and, and just putting the stuff out there to inspire and uplift other women.
00:31:41.060
And also just going back to, you know, what we were just talking about earlier. I mean,
00:31:45.140
being at home and with nationalism, being at home and on the forefront, that is what is going to
00:31:49.700
carry that, that torch for the future.
00:31:52.900
Absolutely. Well said. I also wanted to talk about balancing. It's a balancing act between
00:31:57.780
motherhood and the political social issues. I know you're both the podcasting and all this.
00:32:03.460
It's, it can be tough. You know, you're doing your mom, you're homesteading, and there's all
00:32:08.020
these duties that come with it. It's a balancing act. And some women handle the stress of it
00:32:12.660
better than others. But I wanted to get your take on how you both do it. Carissa, let's start with you.
00:32:19.300
I mean, it can be hard sometimes. I mean, Sarah and I talk about this all the time. You know,
00:32:23.300
some days you just kind of want to shut down and be like, man, is this, is this kind of worth it? And then
00:32:27.620
it's like, well, no, then, then the enemy would win. And it, it, it, it goes back to that, you know,
00:32:33.620
our family is most important. Like last year, we didn't put out a ton of content. I had had a baby
00:32:37.620
that year. We both just had a lot going on in our lives. And it just, for that period and season of
00:32:41.940
life for us, you know, our family was more important. And we, you know, this year we kind
00:32:45.540
of revamped hearth and helm and got back on the horse. And I think there's just going to be seasons
00:32:50.100
of life with us, just as mothers, that that's going to happen where we are going to have to take these
00:32:54.340
breaks and come back. But for me, when I do feel that, that, um, kind of black cloud, I kind of have
00:33:00.020
to just log off for a little bit, go outside, focus on my kids, watch my chickens and just, um,
00:33:05.700
you know, disconnect for a little bit and just focus on what really matters and kind of reclaim
00:33:09.860
and reground myself as to what I really am fighting for. What are, what are we doing with this
00:33:14.900
and everything just to get myself back to that baseline. And then, you know, come back and make,
00:33:19.220
okay, I'm ready. I'm, I'm ready to get back on the same way. And, um, yeah, it's important to just
00:33:25.620
have that, that balance. Cause it, it can't be, you know, you can't be in it all the time. Cause
00:33:31.620
you will, you will just drive yourself crazy. You have to just, I see it happen even with men,
00:33:36.820
although men are built to be in that all the time. They can be in those environments, you know,
00:33:40.900
and it always amazes me like with Henrik, he could probably stream every single day and be into these
00:33:44.340
topics hours a day, you know, cause they're, they're built for it. But also not all men,
00:33:48.180
because I've seen some men also break down and lose their minds and all this stuff. But yeah,
00:33:52.820
it's, it's about taking a break when, you know, it's become too much and just step off and then
00:33:57.540
you get inspired again to, you know, get back on the horse. Like you said, absolutely. Sarah,
00:34:01.540
what about you? Yeah, I would say that, um, it's, uh, for me, it's just like making a list. I'm very
00:34:09.860
much a list maker. Me too. And so I will make a list of the priorities for the day and for the week.
00:34:16.900
And, um, you know, obviously you have to make sure that your priorities are in order. And so,
00:34:22.260
um, you know, tending to like family time and homeschooling and household and homesteading
00:34:29.620
type stuff, um, comes first. And then when there's spare time, which is not often,
00:34:35.380
um, then you can use it for something else. And like laying around and doing nothing,
00:34:40.420
like take a break to just lay, just lay down. Right. When does that happen?
00:34:46.900
No, I don't know that actually. I need to try that.
00:34:50.600
I'm like you too. I have lists and I'm constantly rewriting them and reprioritizing them. And I was
00:34:55.240
like, wait, I don't think this list ever going to happen of like big stuff. And then it changes,
00:35:00.000
you know what I mean? It's constantly changing, but that's the other thing about doing things with,
00:35:04.720
and I know you ladies cover this. You had a guest on and you were talking about doing things with
00:35:08.340
intention, doing things with focus, right? You have to prioritize certain things and let some
00:35:13.380
other things slide. And as a mom, sometimes you have to let go of some of those, uh, you know,
00:35:18.240
some of us can have little OCD tendencies, little things that can irritate us or whatever. And Sarah,
00:35:22.960
I think you're like me that way about certain things. Okay. Let that go. Here's the big things,
00:35:27.500
prioritize that. And also for me, I noticed it's about slowing down because sometimes we can just,
00:35:33.200
women can get frazzled and we take on too much and we're, we're worrying about too much and then
00:35:37.860
we're just not happy. What do you think about that, Sarah? Yeah. Yeah. Oh, I can relate to that,
00:35:44.040
uh, more than I'd like to admit, uh, definitely kind of the OCD thing. And then a terrible habit that
00:35:50.140
I've kind of developed since the 2019 stuff is like, um, insomnia and just like working on projects
00:35:56.500
far too late into the night, researching things far too late into the night. So I think it's really
00:36:00.880
important. Like you said, with that sisterhood, it's, it's nice. Like you said, like having other
00:36:05.220
women in your life to kind of remind you like, okay, you know, it's, you need to take some time
00:36:10.340
to be more intentional, slow down a little bit, like, you know, make sure to get your sleep,
00:36:13.880
get your rest. Those are probably things that I, I should be working on, you know,
00:36:17.820
going to bed earlier. I'm with you on that one too. Going to bed earlier. Everyone was always
00:36:22.640
like, you should sleep when the baby sleeps, for instance. And I, that was always hard. Like,
00:36:26.780
oh, I got to do all these things when the baby's asleep or napping or whatever. And now it's like,
00:36:31.140
okay, baby's going to sleep. Let's say, I don't know. I say baby, but kids like, oh,
00:36:34.980
they got to sleep nine 30, 10. You should be going to sleep then if you want the proper amount of sleep,
00:36:38.780
but it just doesn't work that way. Cause sometimes you're like, okay, I want a couple hours of myself now.
00:36:42.140
And then next thing you know, I'm like, you're, oh, it's a one or two a.m., you know,
00:36:47.120
constantly doing that. It's wild. It is wild. But, but I do think, like you said,
00:36:52.260
it has something to do with motherhood because when you have babies and especially like when
00:36:56.340
you're breastfeeding, you know, as any mother knows you are, you get used to having very odd
00:37:01.740
sleeping hours for sure. Being up through the night and that sort of thing. So, yeah. Yeah. No,
00:37:06.640
I definitely try to be mindful of my, my slow down culture. Cause I, I have a tendency.
00:37:11.560
It's always like, I guess, cause you're just in mom mode. You'll be like, okay, I'm doing this
00:37:15.040
while I'm doing dishes. Oh, I should have a load of laundry going. So by the time that's done,
00:37:19.480
I can hang up my clothes outside and you know, all of this. And I actually was thinking about
00:37:23.360
this the other day. I did a little post on Hearth and Helm about it, that I've gone back to,
00:37:27.160
to kneading bread by hand instead of putting it in my mixer, because it just took me, it brought me
00:37:33.220
back to just appreciate the art of kneading dough. And while I was doing that, I saw my children
00:37:37.740
just really, really lovely playing together and just taking in that moment where I would
00:37:43.440
have probably missed that had I put the bread in the mixer and just moved on to something else and
00:37:48.000
just got flooded back to a lot of memories, just watching them play. And just this intent of making
00:37:53.460
this bread and that a machine never could have done that for me. Had I put the dough in the,
00:37:58.660
in the machine and it mixed and just that slowdown of just taking in all these like really precious
00:38:03.600
moments that sometimes we miss just because we have some, we're always going so many different
00:38:08.200
directions as mothers. And I think it's important to, to do that. I mean, sometimes we, we have to
00:38:13.400
kind of put something on the back burner in order to just appreciate and savor those moments because
00:38:17.900
they're only little ones. And I want to take that in. And I've just really tried to work on my slow
00:38:23.240
down type of culture, I guess. Yeah, that's a really important, especially today with, you know,
00:38:28.500
social media and the kids are in this, they're having this TikTok brain syndrome and those things
00:38:33.240
can catch up to you. I even got the blue light glasses, right? To put on at night. So you have
00:38:37.880
the, the amber screen. So you start dumping melatonin. It's, it's hard in this day and age,
00:38:43.060
everything, it feels like it moves so fast, but so slow at the same time. I feel like lately,
00:38:47.200
it's a really bizarre thing, but yeah, like you were saying with, with the, the bread, sometimes you
00:38:51.580
need something to really focus, focus in on just to slow you down, to kind of just get yourself to
00:38:58.160
relax. I noticed that, right? Just, just to focus on one thing at a time, instead of like with women,
00:39:04.480
we have tendency to, and I think it's amplified with technology, multitasking. Like I'm the queen
00:39:09.600
of multitasking and a million different things and lists and things to do. And then sometimes I can
00:39:13.720
just spin myself crazy. Okay, slow down and do, do something that's just, just go outside and do
00:39:20.640
nothing or just sit there and do nothing. Or just maybe you need to meditate for a second or just go
00:39:24.440
take a walk and try to not think about anything. I find like that's, that's harder in this day and
00:39:29.640
age, don't you think? To just not really focus on anything. Oh, sorry, you're shaking your head.
00:39:34.420
You know what I'm talking about. Oh, it is. I can relate to this so much, actually. Like today,
00:39:39.000
today I finally was just like, I need to go walk around the farm. Like there's spring wildflowers
00:39:45.040
coming up and I walked back to the creek just for like 10 minutes and like put my feet in the water.
00:39:50.040
It was freezing cold and I was like, oh my gosh, I haven't done this in so long. And yeah,
00:39:53.580
it's, it's so important. Like you said, just to kind of go out to the woods, get grounded,
00:39:57.480
you know, be in touch with nature. I mean, obviously I am out in the garden working and
00:40:02.060
stuff, but yeah, setting aside the tasks and kind of doing nothing is super important too. And
00:40:07.780
actually I'm grateful for Carissa in my life because I feel like you, you are always inspiring
00:40:12.060
me to kind of take those moments to be more intentional, you know? So I really appreciate that.
00:40:17.000
Yeah. It's super sweet. I love that story you told about your sourdough in the pits.
00:40:23.580
All right. So now I want to transition and talk about pedophiles. Yes. Pedophiles or groomers,
00:40:28.900
whichever you choose. I like to use both their pedophiles and their groomers. I know you've
00:40:33.120
both been seeing all this LGBTQP total hysteria and now it's emboldened these pedophiles to go after
00:40:39.160
kids in all these unthinkable ways. And the establishment is just glossing it over. In fact,
00:40:43.460
there was this recent judge that was nominated, right? The black lady and in every, in each and
00:40:49.280
every pedophile case that she had, I think there was like eight cases. She went light on the pedophiles
00:40:54.960
and this even included baby sex torture. I couldn't believe that when I heard that. This is the lady
00:41:01.300
who's on the Supreme Court and all we're hearing about is, oh, diversity and it's so amazing. And
00:41:05.680
oh, but she's black and all this going light on pedophiles. Like this is the system that we're in
00:41:11.140
right now. And we've seen a big rise in pedophile teachers getting caught. We've been covering this,
00:41:15.640
the Disney workers being caught, TV, a movie grooming content and stuff that's just totally
00:41:22.060
inappropriate, right? The young kids shouldn't be exposed to. We see this sex ed that's really just
00:41:27.280
brainwashing by groomers who basically want to be able to have sex with toddlers. And I feel like
00:41:32.660
sex ed anymore is just gay. It's just like gay stuff all the time. But yeah, it's really that horrific
00:41:39.560
where things are at. And I know, Sarah, before you had sent me a message about this, this recording,
00:41:45.720
we showed a video of a teacher in drag, giving a little dance to his students just because,
00:41:53.340
you know, I think we have it so we can play that. But what do you all think about this? What's what's
00:41:57.900
their? I mean, just this whole push, all of a sudden this ramp up, Sarah, we'll get your thoughts
00:42:02.560
first. Oh, man. Well, I'm a little behind on the news cycle. So I had heard about this black
00:42:09.280
Supreme Court justice appointee. Is that what it is? Yeah. She's she's in now. She's on the Supreme
00:42:14.860
Court. She's a judge. Okay. Yeah. Wow. No, I didn't. I mean, it's I'm not surprised at all. And
00:42:20.760
I'm just absolutely like speechless. These are the types of things that I feel like as mothers and as
00:42:28.140
women, it's almost unbearable to think about or hear about. But it's also the world that we're
00:42:36.280
living in. And so, you know, we have to, we have to be honest about the fact that that's going on as
00:42:41.940
hard as it is to think about that stuff. I mean, I don't know, I don't even know where to begin.
00:42:48.720
Like, it's so horrible. It's so it's so why Whymar, right? Like, it's it's Whymar tier,
00:42:53.780
we're to that point, we're to that level where the worst of the worst is being normalized. And
00:42:59.780
I mean, what has happened to our society? I mean, in, in this modern day,
00:43:06.140
men, men who once were the protectors and leaders of their clans and their tribes,
00:43:13.400
have been completely suppressed and oppressed. And they're they're in so many ways helpless,
00:43:20.240
like, there's nothing that, you know, that they could do that they, they would have taken care of
00:43:25.520
things in a, in a way that made, you know, sense back in times of old, there were different systems
00:43:31.660
for dealing with criminals, you know, than there are now.
00:43:34.940
I can think of one big way. Yes, yes.
00:43:37.860
Yeah, now, now we see, you know, this criminal justice system that essentially just is.
00:43:43.100
It's, it's horrible. I mean, I don't, I'm just like at a loss, at a loss, to be honest, I don't
00:43:49.800
know, I'm just glad that like, we can homeschool our children and and protect them from this crap.
00:43:54.560
I mean, I don't understand how people can be so blind to it. Like, pedophiles, I will, I refuse to
00:44:00.920
call I'm going to refuse to call pedophiles groomers. But I will say that pedophiles do engage in
00:44:06.400
grooming, for sure. And so and so does the LGBTQ community. And I don't even like to use those
00:44:12.620
letters. I mean, they're homosexuals, and they're people who have mental illnesses. And it is
00:44:19.180
absolutely a fact that's been proven time and time again, that they do prey on children. Like,
00:44:24.460
this is not some made up thing. It's, it's a, it's been known for a long time. This is only in this
00:44:29.220
very recent years that they've been trying to say that it's not. I mean, we, we see we see videos
00:44:35.980
of children at pride festivals with, you know, the most degenerate, horrific stuff going on that you
00:44:41.720
could possibly imagine showing to children. And then you have parents who are taking their children
00:44:47.240
to see these things. I mean, this, this is not about homosexuals having equal rights. This is
00:44:53.940
absolutely about grooming children and converting children to and, and, and wanting them to question
00:45:02.160
their own, you know, gender identity, wanting to instill with them, you know, what is it,
00:45:07.820
gender dysmorphia, or just this, where they're confused about their gender. That's a phenomenon
00:45:13.280
that's, that was never a problem. Like when I was in school, that was not a problem. You know,
00:45:18.440
it wasn't going on. Nobody, nobody was gay. Nobody was homosexual.
00:45:23.120
No, and now there's all this sex ed, we covered all the time, every week, there's all these cases.
00:45:27.760
Now sex ed, it's always about like, teaching five year olds about anal sex or blowjobs. Now,
00:45:33.220
like, that is what has become. And I don't know how you can misconstrue that, how you can explain
00:45:37.800
that away. But this is, this is, this is pedophiles. And this is grooming kids to think
00:45:43.240
that this kind of behavior is normal to engage in these things with this, with these freaks,
00:45:47.540
you know, Carissa, what are your thoughts?
00:45:50.700
Yeah, it starts at such a young age, too. Like I, when I go just to different retail stores from such
00:45:56.600
a young age, you're seeing rainbows on everything for kids. And I think a lot of it is
00:46:00.240
to start normalizing that symbol. It means something totally different from when all of
00:46:04.400
us were growing up. It was, there's, there's a whole monopoly on it. And I a hundred percent
00:46:08.060
think it's just for kids to normalize that. And it seems more appealing to them when they do get
00:46:11.720
into more of the subverse and degenerate things. And it is just, it's really sickening. And it just
00:46:17.040
shows that what happens, how far it goes when people don't take a stand for it. I mean,
00:46:21.520
we've gone so far beyond what people do in their own bedroom, what two consenting adults do,
00:46:26.160
none of my business. No, that never should have, people should have been like, no, that,
00:46:29.460
that it's disgusting because it's, they are going after our children. And I hate to say it,
00:46:34.280
but a lot of people innocently promoted in their own way. People share way too much of their children
00:46:41.060
on the internet, on social media. They think that just because their stuff is private, that
00:46:45.980
it still doesn't get out there. Like when you tag your stuff at, tag your, your, you know,
00:46:51.460
children at places that all is public on the, if you're at a park, for instance, that becomes like
00:46:55.820
public to the park and it's on the internet. And I, I mean, I have like family members that
00:47:00.340
will like post videos of their kids, like in their underwear dancing and they think it's cute
00:47:03.400
and everything. I'm like, no, that's disgusting. Like, why are you putting that on the internet?
00:47:06.400
I would be absolutely mortified and, and sickened if I, you know, 10 years from now, I was that kid
00:47:13.100
and saw that my parents put that on there thinking it was cute. Like, that's something that stays just,
00:47:17.840
you know, like that you just have like, oh, this was funny that you did when you were younger,
00:47:21.760
but it's, it's amazing what they're putting out there that are feeding into that. And they don't
00:47:26.760
really realize that they're feeding into it. Yeah. It's a different day and age. So, and these
00:47:31.240
people are emboldened. Exactly. It's a slippery slope. We used to think that too, just, just leave
00:47:35.440
them alone. It's fine. You want to be gay in the privacy of your own home and all that. And just,
00:47:40.520
okay, sure. You want to be treated equal. And now it's just teaching a four-year-old about blowjobs
00:47:45.980
with a 40 year old man in a gay sex. I mean, that's literally what it is. I was just covering too,
00:47:50.860
Weekend Warrior. There's this family sex show, this new sex ed theater show that's coming out in
00:47:57.800
the UK and they're trying to get kids to come watch it. And the whole family can come learn about
00:48:01.620
porn and self-pleasuring and see these naked people, naked grownups on stage talking about
00:48:10.020
their body parts. And then of course they interweave all the global homo talking points into it,
00:48:15.740
like all every degenerate thing you can think of. And they recommend, well, any age is welcome,
00:48:20.480
but starting at five, because at five years old, you need to expose your kids to like all this
00:48:24.920
really inappropriate stuff. And again, most of them are gay. And a lot of times if they're not
00:48:30.800
gay, then you have to question, okay, is this a pedophile? Because any normal, rational adults
00:48:36.060
would not want to talk to these things about these, as Sarah, you said, these pure, innocent,
00:48:40.980
sweet little souls. Like, why do they even need to learn about these things? Why are you trying to put
00:48:45.720
it into their consciousness? Like just ramming that into their heads right away? Obviously there's an
00:48:50.780
agenda and it is, it is grooming kids, getting them to think that this is normal. So then when some old
00:48:55.860
gross person approaches you for some of these sick, disgusting things, it's, oh, it's normal. I went to
00:49:00.860
the family sex show. They talked about this. It's okay. Right. Oh yeah. Yeah. It's, it's just
00:49:06.660
unbelievable. I mean, it's, it's always like this, they do it right in front of your face, but then when
00:49:11.620
you, when you say, when you point at it and you're like, no, I, I'm not okay with this, then they say
00:49:16.160
that like, oh, you're crazy. You're imagining things like that. We're not doing that. It's like,
00:49:19.580
no, you definitely are. Like you, you just did that. And I saw it with my own eyes and you know,
00:49:24.440
our experiences don't count. What we see doesn't count to, you know, these people. I remember so
00:49:30.440
nearby where I live, which is well known, which is a near Bloomington, Indiana, there's the Kinsey
00:49:35.340
Institute, which I think that you and Henrik maybe have covered in a couple of past episodes.
00:49:39.440
It was just super crazy, horrible, horrible stuff that went on there. And, um, and in that town they
00:49:47.400
had for pride festival, uh, a couple of years ago, I was kind of looking through to see what the
00:49:53.100
activities that they were doing that week were to like, just, you know, dissect it and kind of see
00:49:57.340
what, what are they doing over there? And there was a class that was being held at the public library
00:50:04.940
for pride festival on, um, consent. And the class was a hands-on class for, um, children and
00:50:16.320
caregivers on consent. And I mean, this is at the public library, you know, and then, um, like
00:50:23.520
Carissa was saying with the children's clothing and this sort of thing, it's, it's obvious that they
00:50:27.560
prey on children too, with like this happy, like it's just sparkly unicorns, children, children are
00:50:33.440
so loving. They are so like, they want to give everybody a hug, you know? And that's another
00:50:37.380
thing. Like you have to kind of teach your children, like you don't just go sit up on a stranger's lap
00:50:41.760
or hug a stranger. Unfortunately, like we don't live in, you know, tight knit, you know, close
00:50:46.580
communities anymore for the most part where you can let your children do those sorts of things, but they
00:50:50.380
totally prey on the children with like hearts and like, Oh, love is love. Love is love and rainbows and
00:50:55.940
unicorns. And these are all things that are like fun for kids and sparkly and seemingly innocent.
00:51:00.960
And that's, and that's where it starts, you know, that is exactly where it starts. And, and, um,
00:51:06.240
the, the thing is, is that we as, um, as traditional normal, normal people, we don't have any rights
00:51:16.080
anymore. So once upon a time, you know, they started pushing this crap because it was like, Oh, well,
00:51:20.520
they, they wanted rights. And so it's like a little bit, a little bit, a little bit. Well,
00:51:24.060
now it's to the point where they have all the rights and we have no rights. So if my children
00:51:28.760
are at a little league baseball game and there is a lesbian couple groping each other and making out
00:51:36.200
in the bleachers, which by the way, no straight parents ever do that at little league. Like this
00:51:41.240
is only the type of thing that, um, homosexuals would do because they're always attention seeking
00:51:46.300
and they want to be the center of attention. Do I, as a parent have any right to prevent the,
00:51:51.900
the five-year-olds on the team from, you know, witnessing this?
00:51:54.900
Yeah. What about your five-year-old consent? Okay. Did you get the consent from the kids, uh,
00:51:59.400
to, to watch this? Right. Sorry. Go on.
00:52:01.980
And also like do the coaches and the people who operate the baseball team? No, they have no rights.
00:52:07.260
Like, could you imagine the, um, the lawsuits that would ensue if they were to say a single word
00:52:13.080
to people who are doing this sort of thing? Um, you know, businesses absolutely can't, um,
00:52:18.540
like they have to do business with, they have to bake the cake, right? Like it's a meme where they
00:52:22.540
have to, you have to bake the cake and you know, you're going to like it basically. So we're the
00:52:27.220
ones with no rights and you know, it's like this in so many different areas, but it's certainly like
00:52:31.820
this. They're like literally there. I mean, not to get graphic, but they're literally like shoving
00:52:36.360
dicks in your face and they're like, you're not homophobic. Are you? It's like, you're just annoying
00:52:40.880
and disgusting and inappropriate. And I just don't want to look at you. And I certainly don't want my kids to
00:52:45.820
be looking at you. Anyway, Carissa, I saw you wanted to add something there.
00:52:50.300
No, it is. It's just, I mean, they just subtly add in these things too. It's, it's, it's unreal.
00:52:55.300
Like even just, you know, children's books, you have to be mindful of too. Just there, there'll be a
00:52:59.660
lot of subtle things in there that, and when you bring it to people's attention, they kind of will
00:53:04.480
say, oh, you're just being paranoid or no, it's just, it's just a rainbow. It's just like, you know,
00:53:07.860
like Sarah was saying, it's just this or that. And it's like, no, there, there's a, there's more of an
00:53:11.400
agenda behind that. I mean, they start by normalizing these things and, and whatnot.
00:53:16.120
And it's just, I don't understand where there's this point. Oh, I do understand. I mean,
00:53:19.840
obviously it's more of a rhetorical thing, but when you have like Wells Fargo backing you and
00:53:23.640
Amazon and all these major corporations. Yeah. When they're like changing their logos to rainbows and
00:53:29.840
everything like, no, I mean, it's, you're not a press. Yeah, exactly. Yeah. One thing, sorry,
00:53:36.980
go on. One thing that I think that has happened too with all of this symbolism, because we know
00:53:41.700
how powerful symbolism is. Right. And, um, what I think has happened to a lot of like of, of adults
00:53:48.320
who maybe aren't politically aligned on the far left or the left necessarily, but it's like they
00:53:54.160
have forgotten what homosexuality actually is. It's like, they literally don't even process through
00:53:59.780
their mind that we're talking about like sodomy, like this is sodomy. This is AIDS. This is a hookup
00:54:06.360
culture. Um, anybody who has spent any amount of time with people who identify in that way and who
00:54:12.780
behave that way can tell you with a half a second, the truth about it. It's, um, it's, it's often drug.
00:54:19.640
Oh my God, the drugs, the AIDS, like the disease, the STDs, the hookup culture, like it's, you know,
00:54:26.260
and then, and then of course there was this whole, um, the, the gay marriage thing. I mean, this,
00:54:31.280
I don't know how somebody could access the statistics, but I remember a long time ago
00:54:36.040
reading about this and the divorces, like the divorce rate. I mean, how many, like how many
00:54:40.960
times have you heard about like a homosexual couple, like in your town or your community,
00:54:45.380
they're always getting divorced. Like the relationships do not last. It's, it's an absolute
00:54:49.680
like disgrace to the sanctity of marriage. It's, it's just ridiculous. And, um, and then of course
00:54:57.040
they're adopting children, which should not be allowed. That should absolutely be outlawed.
00:55:01.560
Um, it's just, it's just beyond like this, the situation is, is beyond. And then you see like
00:55:06.360
drag queens doing these presentations for school children in public schools. Every single parent
00:55:11.560
should be at that school right now, withdrawing their child and homeschooling them. Just take
00:55:15.980
them out. Don't like, don't even bother, you know, protesting or writing letters, just take them out
00:55:20.780
of school. That's right. And drag queen culture is, is stripper culture. You're right. It's drugs.
00:55:25.840
It's all these inappropriate things where kids don't belong. It's, they don't belong in this
00:55:29.580
environment or exposed to these people. It's this degenerate night, uh, seedy culture, you know?
00:55:35.200
Yeah. It's just, and the pride festivals generally have always been just like really raunchy and
00:55:40.640
disgusting and in your face, not appropriate for kids. And a lot of these young kids that do get
00:55:44.800
exposed to that, they get convinced, they're trying to convince kids that they're trans. Like you see
00:55:48.420
that it happened. You can convince little kids of anything when they're three, four, five years old,
00:55:53.040
but they're, Oh, are you sure you're not gay? Are you sure you're not trans? Are you sure you're not
00:55:56.080
a boy or not? It's like, they keep trying to do this. Right. And then what happens here? You're
00:56:00.520
we're looking at Desmond is amazing here. It will turn into this. And I'll be surprised if this boy
00:56:04.880
lives to be 14, he already looks like he's on drugs and he's like doing the whole like, uh, pride,
00:56:11.040
trans, who knows what thing. And so I just keep thinking, what, what is their end game? And I feel that
00:56:16.900
their end game is destroy the family units, destroy the ability for people to procreate,
00:56:23.200
right. Um, starting with white countries, of course, it's the trans human agenda. It's destroying
00:56:28.500
what makes us men and women. And also it's a war on procreation, a war on the family unit. That's the
00:56:34.160
thing that makes us the, the healthiest and the strongest as part of the depopulation agenda.
00:56:39.980
What do you think about that? I, I think that you're right. And another, another thing I wanted
00:56:45.960
to add really quickly about it is that you see this a lot with like white children and let's take
00:56:52.700
a look at what's happened to white children over the past, you know, several decades, like slowly,
00:56:57.320
but surely, and more recently, very quickly, they have been completely broken down. I mean,
00:57:02.700
starting in kindergarten, they are subjected to this anti-white curricula that is just blasting like
00:57:08.760
Anne Frank and Martin Luther King in their faces every year, year after year to make sure that
00:57:14.560
like, they will always remember, you know, how horrible their ancestors were. And on top of that,
00:57:20.080
they're told that they have no culture, um, that their people are, you know, have always just been
00:57:25.040
essentially genocidal maniacs. All of these lies, these absolute lies, this is subversion. It is
00:57:30.940
intentional. It is, it is, it's psychologically traumatizing. And so you see a lot of these children,
00:57:37.920
they're coming into, you know, like higher grades in school, and then they're coming out and saying,
00:57:42.160
oh, well, I'm, you know, um, trans or like, I have this like weird gender identity or I'm queer.
00:57:48.240
Well, it's because they're told that those are the good kids, that those are the special kids
00:57:52.840
and that they're interesting and that they get put on a pedestal. And so, of course,
00:57:57.380
when you have children who've been subjected to all of this deracination and completely stripped
00:58:02.820
down of all of their identity and any sense of natural pride that should naturally exist,
00:58:08.360
then a lot of them, as being the young children that they are, not knowing any better,
00:58:12.780
will start to adopt these identities. But then our enemies want to tell us that it's always been
00:58:17.980
this way, that this large population of children has always been trans. It's just that now they're
00:58:24.560
free to, you know, kids are like, it's, it's safer for them to like come out now. And it's like,
00:58:28.880
no, I call absolute BS. Like we all know that that is a lie and it's absolute evil. It's just,
00:58:36.620
it's so sad. It is. They're, they, they want to destroy them. They want to completely break them
00:58:42.400
down. And I think what they want here is that the children are the next generation, you know,
00:58:47.000
and why people, yeah, we've been hit hardest with this Frankfurt schoolie and Weimar propaganda
00:58:51.740
because we stand in the way ultimately of total domination. I think if they can completely break
00:58:57.420
these kids down and, and mold them, that's what they want for this great reset. And then they
00:59:02.340
think that they can have it in the bag, right? You know, agenda 2030, they want us in the city
00:59:07.220
gulag pods, eating the bugs hooked up to, to this, you know, VR. And I think really having no genitals,
00:59:14.280
having no genitals so that you can't procreate, you just have no, no sex whatsoever, no biological
00:59:19.740
sex and no actual healthy sex. And also just no mind to think with anymore. I mean, I just don't
00:59:25.240
know where, where else, where else is this going? That's what I feel. It's just total death. Now,
00:59:30.280
Carissa, did you want to add something?
00:59:32.940
No, it just, it needs to go back to being considered a mental illness. I mean,
00:59:36.160
because that's exactly what it is. And they've removed that from the textbooks, as we know,
00:59:39.960
but it's also just sad that they, they kind of, you know, pry on these just moments that
00:59:44.320
throughout childhood, you know, like I, there was something I saw, it was just a stupid meme that
00:59:47.980
said something like, shout out to my mom for not putting me on hormone blockers when I went through a
00:59:52.500
tomboy phase or something. And it's true. Like, I mean, I went through a little tomboy phase,
00:59:56.900
but like nowhere was my mom or like, Oh, do you think, do you think, you know, do you identify
01:00:00.000
as a male or anything like that? It was just like, well, no, I was in the sports and just,
01:00:03.860
you know, eventually you get a little bit more feminine and everything as time goes on. But it's
01:00:07.060
just, it is, it's, it's insane that they, they kind of capitalize on just these, these, you know,
01:00:11.240
things that you go through as you're an adolescent and growing up and, and just finding yourself and
01:00:15.700
everything. But it's just immediately like, Oh, okay, well, this is our, this is our time to,
01:00:19.460
to, to swoop in there and just, you know, totally derail.
01:00:24.980
To store their body and mind. The other thing that really gets me too, is that, yeah, like you
01:00:29.460
said, little kids at adolescent stuff, they explore, they're going to explore different
01:00:32.900
parts of their body and they might even touch them and look at them. It doesn't mean that they're
01:00:36.760
sexual. Like this is what it's become for these pedophile groom. Oh, see, they're thinking about
01:00:41.240
sex because he touched his peepee and he's a toddler. It's just like, this is crazy talk. It used to be
01:00:47.260
things that are just innocent and natural and normal things that humans go through that they're
01:00:51.800
just trying to make everything sexual with kids now. And it's disgusting. We have to put our foot
01:00:56.480
down and shame these people. So yeah, call them pedophiles, call them groomers. Like this is,
01:01:01.540
this is a serious thing. I mean, I, it's, it's, it's a nightmare and everyone should be concerned.
01:01:06.940
It amazes me that there's these liberal moms who are like, Oh, relax, calm down. Like this is one of the
01:01:12.700
biggest things you should be concerned about as a mother. It's just outrageous. Anything you ladies
01:01:17.760
want to add? Well, yeah, I, I remember years ago, actually listening to a red ice interview that you
01:01:26.480
guys had, you had this person on who it was a, a transgender person. And you know, this, this person
01:01:33.420
was talking about how like, they, uh, or I don't know if they were transgender. I'm sorry. Maybe they
01:01:39.340
were, they were like homosexual, but they were talking out about it. They were talking about how
01:01:44.620
the origins of a lot of this is in pedophilia, that children who have been abused end up adopting
01:01:51.240
this identity later. And also the suicide rates were, were discussed during this episode. And that's
01:01:57.360
something that is completely suppressed is the actual like scientific data there. You know, if there
01:02:02.540
are studies out there, we're not allowed to see them, but we know that it's true. The suicide rates are
01:02:07.300
high among these people. There's remorse and regret. And, and just the fact that it's even allowed to
01:02:14.360
put children on hormone blockers is almost like beyond, it's almost like beyond my ability, like
01:02:23.160
beyond my ability to conceive, like to conceive the, of the concept. I just like, it's medical malpractice
01:02:29.100
and child abuse. I was just looking into that the other day of, of all the harm that these puberty
01:02:33.180
blockers cause to kids physically, I'm sure you can imagine from bone density to cardio problems,
01:02:39.120
to brain problems, to IQ problems, not to mention emotional and social problems. So we don't know
01:02:45.120
what the long-term effects of this are. They're on these puberty blockers. And then afterwards,
01:02:48.360
they go on to all these other hormones. So they're basically slaves to big pharma forever. And like,
01:02:53.320
I'm liberated. I found myself, but I can't be myself without these drugs for the rest of my life.
01:02:58.700
And, and that life will probably be really short to taking all these drugs. It's outrageous. So I know
01:03:05.420
these things are really black pilling. One of the last things to talk about is on the importance of
01:03:10.960
not getting black pilled and staying positive, no matter what it looks like, no matter how hard it is
01:03:16.860
some days, because a lot of times people say, well, why are, why are you bringing attention to these
01:03:20.620
things? We have to know how bad it is. We have to know the things that are going on to be equipped to be
01:03:24.720
able to fight back because eventually you might not want to fight back or speak out against these
01:03:29.240
things or be concerned about it, but it will find its way to your doorstep, your, your kids' minds,
01:03:35.020
your, the school, the place that you work, like it's unavoidable. So we have to tackle these things.
01:03:39.820
We have to know what's going on. But I say not to be black pilled because so many people are coming
01:03:45.880
awake to these things. They're putting their foot down. I think that there's a lot of good,
01:03:49.620
healthy, normal people still. We're just getting hit with a lot of the mainstream conditioning in
01:03:55.480
certain circles and media. So we think that it's like a lot more people are into these things and
01:04:00.100
then it really is. They're, they're trying to hoodwink us to believe that this is the norm when
01:04:04.660
it really isn't the norm. Carissa, what are your thoughts on not being black? Well, yeah, they
01:04:09.960
definitely, I mean, they want you to be a black pilled. They want you to feel alone and isolated in
01:04:13.760
these thoughts. And that's why it is important to have these conversations with people because people are
01:04:18.420
waking up, you can find something with people that they will agree on, have it be, you know, the mandates
01:04:23.060
or the mask mandates or vaccines or something that's, you know, kind of just hits, you know, a little bit
01:04:27.740
of the tip of the iceberg. You know, you can, you can start talking about that with people to, to, you
01:04:32.960
know, open those doors a little bit, because like you said, eventually it will, you know, I tell people
01:04:36.700
that all the time that eventually this might not be something that's, that's important to you, but
01:04:40.200
eventually it will come down to something that is really important to you. And I have seen that
01:04:43.440
happen time and time again with people. So I think it's, it's just important to not, to not let it get
01:04:48.360
to you. And like we were talking about earlier, just when you do feel that to kind of take that
01:04:51.360
reset time to, you know, just get back to your baseline and to just recharge and then get back
01:04:57.840
on the horse and, and keep going. I mean, cause it's, you don't want them to win. Um, cause like
01:05:03.420
I said, that that's their main goal is for you to feel isolated and alone and that nobody else thinks
01:05:07.540
the way that we do when that's not the case. A lot more people think the way that we do than you,
01:05:12.040
many of my things. Sarah, anything? Yeah. Um, I mean, for me, I feel very fortunate that I have
01:05:20.420
children and, you know, an awesome husband who, I mean, we've been together 17 years. We are best
01:05:25.260
friends. We've been through so much together. I, that's what keeps me from not getting too black
01:05:31.020
pilled is my family. And, you know, also again, you know, I feel blessed to live in a place where
01:05:37.240
it's, you know, nature all around me. So I can go outside. I can be in the sunshine. I can hear the
01:05:41.560
birds singing anytime that we're connecting with nature. That is so healing. It's so therapeutic
01:05:48.120
and it's so important. It's, um, it's as important as eating a healthy diet and getting exercised,
01:05:54.740
you know, just being outside, um, is great. Also a connection with, with our ancestors. I mean,
01:06:00.820
Carissa and I are both pagan. I know I'm pretty sure that you are as well, if I'm not mistaken. And so
01:06:05.820
we have a strong, um, emphasis on ancestor veneration. And so for me, sometimes just
01:06:12.740
giving a little offering, you know, just pouring a glass of wine, you know, for my ancestors,
01:06:16.840
it can help me feel connected with them or placing something on the altar, like, um, food that I've
01:06:22.420
cooked and just kind of say a little prayer, um, connect with them and, and feel that, you know,
01:06:28.020
your blood is, is the same blood of your ancestors and that our people have survived forever. And we're
01:06:34.740
going to win, but you know, um, there's going to be losses and wins along the way, and it's not
01:06:41.960
always going to be winning. Um, like they say, hard times make strong men. Um, we will get through
01:06:47.880
this. The, the harder that our enemies push, the more our people wake up and the quicker our people
01:06:54.240
wake up and they are awakening. I have encountered, you know, quote unquote normies more recently,
01:07:00.720
more so ever, more so than ever recently, excuse me, um, who are, you know, talking about the things
01:07:07.800
that we need to be talking about. So yeah, like you can, you can, uh, you can take the black pills,
01:07:13.340
but, um, don't just don't get too black-pilled. There's really no reason to, because there's going
01:07:17.720
to be things in life that are beyond our control. Um, you know, maybe, maybe getting active is a
01:07:23.020
solution, you know, becoming an activist, also having a network of friends, not just on the internet,
01:07:28.580
but IRL, there's so much going on right now in our movement. There are so many opportunities
01:07:34.300
for meeting other people and forming networks and communities, getting together for picnics
01:07:41.080
and being able to talk to people face-to-face about what's going on is so important. And, um,
01:07:47.340
so I guess that would, that would be my advice. Absolutely. Yeah. Camaraderie, you need people
01:07:53.020
around you because I noticed a lot of the most black-pilled people I know are also some of the
01:07:57.420
most isolated people that I know. I mean, you have to let out some steam. You have to be able to laugh
01:08:02.220
with people. You have to remember, like, there's still a lot of good in this world and, and go out
01:08:05.980
into nature and there's still a lot of happy, healthy families who are completely sane. And
01:08:10.080
actually, even when you think of the greater planet, a lot of people agree with us on a lot of
01:08:14.900
things, you know, we're just getting hit really hard with this kind of crap in the West and there's
01:08:19.360
just a loud vocal minority and sure they're trying to pull kinds of stuff, but in the end,
01:08:24.080
tyranny, yeah, sure they can win in the short term, but in the long term, people want to be free.
01:08:29.120
You know, they want to be free and they will fight back for that. So anyway, ladies, it's been great
01:08:33.400
having you here and connecting with you. Uh, it's, it's always a pleasure. It feels like,
01:08:37.580
it feels like yesterday to me, even though it's like several years can go by, but that's how it is
01:08:41.580
when we, we have that, we have that connection, you know? So I want to know where people can find your
01:08:45.920
stuff. Let people know. I know you're on Telegram and Subscribestar, YouTube, DLive, correct? Let us know, Sarah.
01:08:51.280
Yes. Uh, Telegram is where we're at daily. Uh, we post content there daily, mostly original content,
01:08:59.440
but we also share other channels that we like. So that's definitely the place to find us. You can
01:09:03.960
join the chat and comment on things there if you want. We also have a YouTube channel and a bit
01:09:09.400
shoot channel. Uh, we are working on getting an Odyssey set up, but not quite there yet. We do have
01:09:15.100
a Subscribestar where we post blogs. So if you want to check that out, you're welcome to.
01:09:19.820
We are also on the old, um, the old enemy archaic spots. So Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook.
01:09:27.920
All right. Use it however long you can. Yeah. We don't post there very often, but we are there.
01:09:33.200
So there's, you know, ways to reach out, ways to get in touch. So yeah.
01:09:37.640
Carissa, anything you want to add there?
01:09:39.760
No, no. She's covered. I mean, everywhere you can find us.
01:09:42.380
That's right. Are you on, are you on Twitter or no? Cause I went to go look at your old Twitter
01:09:46.800
from the old show and that was long gone. So. Oh, really?
01:09:50.380
Did you post some naughty things? Yeah. Oh.
01:09:53.740
Yeah. I got off it a long time ago. I just, I don't know. I never found much use with it. I
01:09:57.880
didn't, I didn't really care for it much. So yeah, I just got off of it. Not really for any
01:10:02.840
particular reason. Just.
01:10:04.240
It's kind of boring. It's kind of over it. It's amazing how much time you can waste. I always say,
01:10:07.920
I wouldn't be, I don't think I'd be on social media if I wasn't doing this, but some days I'm
01:10:13.020
like, ah, it's a hassle. I gotta go post something there. And there's some people that are just like
01:10:16.060
addicted to it. It's amazing how if you just, if you just don't have a Twitter, how much more time
01:10:21.300
you can have. Anyway, thank you for coming on. It's been a blast. And I just want to let all our
01:10:26.680
listeners know, people that may be catching the show, people always say, oh, it's so hard to find you
01:10:31.020
now that you're not on YouTube. That always drives me nuts. I don't want to hear you say that. We are not on
01:10:35.140
the dark corners of the internet. All you have to do is go to redice.tv. Just go right there,
01:10:40.820
put it in your browser, and you'll find all the links. So thanks to our members and supporters
01:10:45.160
for making this show possible. We can't do it without you. So we'll see you all in the next one.
01:11:05.140
Do you love red ice? Want more? Get access to exclusive material by signing up for a red
01:11:22.740
ice membership. You'll be able to watch weekend warrior, our flagship show, the second hour of
01:11:28.580
interviews and other special feature videos only for subscribers. Were you a member and we lost you
01:11:35.120
along the way? Renew. We love and appreciate you guys and gals and cannot do this without you. Help
01:11:41.060
us be a sane voice, a lighthouse in the sea of insanity. As times get tougher, as people are searching for
01:11:47.680
answers, they're going to need content like red ice. A little of all your support can go a long way.
01:11:54.300
Thank you.
01:11:58.580
Thank you.
Link copied!